Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

Urban dwellers wasting water

- THOMAS MORGAN

CITY SLICKERS are churning through more water than this time last year and are on track to use more than at any other time this decade, in a slap in the face to the twothirds of the state grappling with drought.

The Bulletin can reveal the gobsmackin­g data that shows southeast Queensland­ers are using 15 litres of water more per person each day than the same time last year – flying in the face of calls to support the bush, including efforts to have fireworks and events cancelled or boycotted.

At the height of summer in January this year, the southeast’s water consumptio­n peaked at 239 litres per person per day – the highest since before the Millennium Drought, which ended in 2010.

Southeast Queensland­ers are currently using 203 litres a day per person, compared with 188 litres at this time last year, sparking concerns the January record will be eclipsed if households don’t make an effort to start conserving

GOLD COAST BULLETIN

Tuesday, November 5, 2019

water. The shocking waste comes as dams supplying the southeast’s water grid fell below 60 per cent capacity this week for the first time in a decade, with residents warned to anticipate water restrictio­ns by May next year.

Sixty-six per cent of Queensland is now droughtdec­lared after months of below-average rainfall.

Southern Downs Mayor Tracy Dobie, whose region faces running out of water in weeks, said the shockingly high water usage showed how “lazy we have become with our water use”.

“We are the driest nation on Earth, it’s time we acted like it,” she said.

“We were raised to be careful with water because we used to only have tank (water) because people have gotten lazy and we waste water,” she said.

Residents of Samford and Dayboro, less than 30km from Brisbane, have been forced to truck in water as their dams and water tanks tap out.

Free water access points opened by Moreton Bay Regional Council have since provided 1 million litres of water to thirsty residents in the area and their livestock.

The Gold Coast desalinati­on plant was this week tasked to operate at 100 per cent capacity as dams across southeast Queensland fell below the 60 per cent mark for the first time in a decade.

Even at full capacity however, the desalinati­on plant can only provide 15 per cent of southeast Queensland’s daily water use.

Water restrictio­ns are put in place once dam levels fall below 50 per cent.

Urban Utilities, which delivers water to 1.4 million residents in the southeast, said conservati­on could see water restrictio­ns avoided.

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